Bilin grassroots leader Mohammed Khatib arrested in late-night raid
Print This
By Popular Struggle Coordination Committee
Electronic Intifada
Friday, Jan 29, 2010
BILIN, occupied West Bank -
At 1:45am today, Mohammed Khatib, his wife Lamia and their four young
children were woken up by Israeli soldiers storming their home, which
was surrounded by a large military force. Once inside the house, the
soldiers arrested Khatib, conducted a quick search and left the house.
Roughly half an hour after leaving the house, five military jeeps
surrounded the house again, and six soldiers forced their way into the
house, where Khatib's children sat in terror. The forces conducted
another very thorough search of the premises, without showing a search
warrant. During the search, Khatib's phone and many documents were
seized, including papers from Bilin's legal procedures in the Israel
high court.
The soldiers exited an hour and a half later, leaving a note saying
that documents suspected as "incitement materials" were seized.
International activists who tried to enter the house to be with the
family during the search were aggressively denied entry.
Mohammed Khatib was previously arrested during the ongoing wave of
arrests and repression on 3 August 2009 with charges of incitement and
stone throwing. After two weeks of detention, a military judge ruled
that evidence against him was falsified and ordered his release, after
it was proven that Khatib was abroad at the time the army alleged he
was photographed throwing stones during a demonstration.
Khatib's arrest today is the most severe escalation in a recent wave of
repression again the Palestinian popular struggle and its leadership.
Khatib is the 35th resident of Bilin to be arrested on suspicions
related to anti-wall protest since 23 June 2009.
The recent wave of arrests is largely an assault on the members of the
Popular Committees -- the leadership of the popular struggle -- who are
then charged with incitement when arrested. The charge of incitement,
defined under Israeli military law as "an attempt, whether verbally or
otherwise, to influence public opinion in the area in a way that may
disturb the public peace or public order," is a cynical attempt to
punish grassroots organizing with a hefty charge and lengthy
imprisonment. Such indictments are part of the army's strategy of using
legal persecution as a means to quash the popular movement.
Similar raids have also been conducted in the village of al-Maasara,
south of Bethlehem, and in the village of Nilin -- where 110 residents
have been arrested over the last year and half -- as well as in the
cities of Nablus, Ramallah and East Jerusalem.
Among those arrested in the recent campaign are three members of the
Nilin Popular Committee, Said Yakin of the Palestinian National
Committee Against the Wall, and five members of the Bilin Popular
Committee -- all suspected of incitement.
Prominent grassroots activists Jamal Juma' (East Jerusalem) and
Mohammed Othman (Jayyous) of the Stop the Wall nongovernmental
organization, involved in anti-wall and boycott, divestment and
sanctions campaigning, have recently been released from detention after
being incarcerated for long periods based on secret evidence and with
no charges brought against them.
Electronic Intifada
Print This
|